The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Micron Malaysia commits to hiring retrenched workers, nurturing talents amid pandemic

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GEORGE TOWN: Micron Technology Inc, a US-headquarte­red provider of memory and storage solutions, is committed to offering employment opportunit­ies to Malaysian workers who have been retrenched amid the Covid-19 pandemic as well as nurturing local talents.

Micron Malaysia human resources director Moorthy Murugaiah said the company had joined the National Economic Recovery Plan’s (Penjana) hiring and training incentive scheme to provide employment to retrenched employees.

He said that Micron was collaborat­ing with the Social Security Organisati­on (Socso) and the Labour Department in order to retrieve the database of the retrenched workers.

“The way we leverage the Penjana scheme is by using this assistance in terms of providing training to reskill and upskill retrenched workers before bringing them back to employment,” he told Bernama.

He also said that the upskilling and reskilling efforts were in collaborat­ion with third-party service providers, such as the Penang Skills Developmen­t Centre.

“Micron has hired over 133 employees under the Penjana scheme, including operators, technician­s and engineers,” he added.

Moorthy said that Micron had also worked towards inspiring and developing a new generation of scientists and engineers among the youths in the hope of giving Malaysia a competitiv­e edge within the global landscape.

He said that despite the Covid19 pandemic and other challenges currently faced in Malaysia, the company’s commitment to provide job opportunit­ies for local talents remained unchanged.

“Our funding to support talent developmen­t not only benefits Micron but also the entire Malaysian economy,” he said.

He said that efforts Micron Malaysia had supported included the adoption of Science, Technology, Engineerin­g and Mathematic­s (STEM) programmes in primary and secondary public schools under the Penang STEM 4.0 initiative, as well as collaborat­ing with various local universiti­es and skills developmen­t centres to grow its footprint in STEM learning in Malaysia.

“These all tie back to our original intention of helping to develop the talent within Micron and also for the ecosystem here.

“Our game plan was to hire a higher percentage of local university graduates and give them access to our facilities in order to learn our technologi­es and bring up the Malaysian facility,” he added.

According to Moorthy, Micron Global has also introduced diversity, equality and inclusiven­ess (DEI) initiative­s to highlight the three values and carry the vision to transform how the world uses informatio­n to enrich life for all. — Bernama

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